The document discusses how the forest industry in Canada is changing to utilize forest biomass for energy production. It notes that traditional forest management was focused on producing high quality timber but that rapid technological changes mean forests must now be managed differently. Forest biomass can provide a significant source of energy for provinces without fossil fuels. This will impact concepts of forest management including rotation ages, units of measurement, and species utilization. Tables provide estimates of Canada's forest reserves and harvest levels.
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1. THE FOREST INDUSTRY
Forest industry in north-western Canada has cooperated with Alberta
Energy and Natural Resources in providing funds to assist the Faculty of
INDUSTRIAL Agriculture and Forestry through sponsorship of outside speakers.,
During the 1976-77 term a seminar course was developed, taught by
FORESTRY Desmond I. Crossley and Maxwell T. MacL'aggan. The contribution of these
two noted Canadian foresters was much appreciated.
IN A In the fall of 1977 C. Ross Silversides was brought in for a week to visit
with students and staff. During this visit he gave several talks to students,
and made one major address. We are pleased to be able to make this major
address widely available through this printing.
We would like to take this opportunity to express our thanks again to the
C. ROSS sponsors of this program-we appreciate very much their support.
SILVERSIDES
Forestry Program North Western Pulp and Power Ltd.-Hinton
Procter and Gamble Cellulose Ltd-Grande Prairie
The University of Alberta Simpson Timber Co. (Alberta) Ltd: -Whitecourt
Alberta Forest Products Association-Edmonton
77 November 1977 Prince George Pulp and Paper Ltd.-Prince George
Takla Logging Co. Ltd.-Prince George
Northwood Pulp and Timber Ltd.-Prince George
Alberta Energy and Natural Resources
FOREST INDUSTRY LECTURE SERIES NO. 1
2. C. ROSS SILVERSIDES
INDUSTRIAL FORESTRY W A CHANGING CANADA
C.R. Silversides*
In the, beginning I would like to explain why the adjective industrial has bee
the title of this paper. It is simply to indicate that I will be discussing forest management
standpoint of the production of wood for industrial purposes rather than from that related
wildlife or recreation.
Forest management has almost always been product oriented. The variou
management systems have evolved around different products such as charcoal, saw
versides is Chief, Forest Management Technology program, Forest pulpwood, piling, etc. The systems may be coppice, coppice with standards, large tree
titute, Canadian Forestry Service, Ottawa, Ontario.
from the University of Toronto in 1939 with a B.Sc.F. in agriculture, over long rotations, even-aged stands of monocultures of pulpwood size, and so forth.
mployment with the Dominion Forest Service. He also worked as a
The silvicultural systems developed in Europe were transferred to North A
ith Great Lakes PaperCo. Ltd., before spending 1942 to 1945 with the
ry Corps in the Canadian Army. Ross returned to the Great Lakes forestry schools via teachers and textbooks of European origin. There was little or no inter
gging Superintendent until 1945, when he accepted at as Research
he Pulp and Paper Research Institute of Canada. In 1948, Ross to actual conditions in North America and as a result, In the light of existing forests and p
ree of F.E. in Harvesting from the University of Toronto.
social and economic conditions, little so-called forest management was practiced. Basica
8, Ross Silversides worked for Abitibi Paper Company as Woodlands
ineer and Director of Woodlands Development. In 1968, Ross joined was no place for forest management systems, all of which were based upon a shortage of
Forest Management Institute, first as Chief, Logging Development
w as Chief, Forest Management Technology Program. a land where there was a great surplus into the Indefinite future. Today, 75 years later, in
some regional shortages are beginning to appear. They may be in species, In specificatio
many scientific organizations. He is Co-ordinator, Division 3 rest
Techniques), International Union of Forest Research Organizations; absolute shortages in volume. Shortages produce concern, concern produces co
Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Silviculture (1976); and
management
National Research Council Associate Committee on Air Cushion
nadian Institute of Forestry, in recognition of Ross's contributions
him the Canadian Forestry Achievement Award. Ross is a member of
itute of Forestry and the Ontario Professional Foresters Association.
is well known and experienced nationally and internationally. In he
ts gained from an international perspective and from a
Chief, Forest Management Technology Program, Forest Management Institute,
Environment Canada.
3. Stability is the classic goal of forestry. Sustained yield and the normal fo
e pattern which developed in Europe and elsewhere. Forests were used and
dominant themes which have guided the development of forestry since the theoretica
became short in supply, then and not really until then were conscious efforts
managed forests first began to emerge in Germany several hundred years ago (Zivnus
forests under some sort of management, to extend their use or to rebuild
However, the problems facing foresters in Canada have been well ex
esource.
John Waiters, Director of the University of British Columbia Forest at Haney, B.C. I
Forest management is a term which can mean all things to all people or
1965 issue of the Forestry Chronicle, Waiters published a paper entitled "The Uncertai
e. Sometimes the terms "extensive" and "intensive" forest management are
I personally feel that this paper should be made compulsory reading for all forestry
s are subjective and cannot be defined specifically. Canada to date I would
Canada. In this paper he points out a number of things which are known, but have not
ers have been trying, against considerable odds, to promote the concepts of
accepted. Our forestry practices, inherited from Europe, were developed when
, of sustained or Increased yield d applied silviculture with minimal success.
immobilized by lack of change.
ccessful, we would then be the inheritors of 28.3 million hectares (283 000
If one thinks back, the aim of the German and Scandinavian forest manag
sufficiently )eked burned-over and cutover forest lands in Canada.
and still is, in many Instances, to produce very high quality large trees as a source
en suggested that North American forestry may be well off
lumber and other sawn products. At that time in history, and this is for a period of sever
radition or successful past practices because it will not then be necessary to
years, this was the only conversion of wood. Pulp and other fibre products came muc
ments in practices resulting from changes in industrial A economic conditions.
France, for example, they are still growing oak on a two hundred year rotation. The
blem, particularly In the United States, is that early legislation !aling with
existed to supply timber to the French Navy but today go mainly into logs for the furnitur
n the statute books, constrains current practice. Probably the outstanding
The conversion has changed but the forestry practices haven't. To quote from Waiters: "T
the Monongahela decision which forbade e cutting of any but diseased or
we used as models grew and matured while time stood still. Today, forests grow at tradit
S. National Parks and forest serves. By old legislation modern forest
to mature In a strange market under non-traditional conditions of continuous and a
ods were outlawed.
change and the forester rightly questions the reality of the future market assured by trad
ation has not developed in Canada, at least to the same degree.
Change is now measured in geometric progressions. New principles, techniques, and
give birth to new industries which become giants before tree seedlings become saplings.
4. onstant change is now inevitable and normal. To state that forestry th its long Particle or wafer boards are a post World War 11 phenomenon a
exception is an exercise in restraint. As foresters, with r purposes always in the some Impact on the utilization of aspen but the requirement is small compared
t not only accept more change, but we must anticipate it. We must get into the the resource.
nological progress and re-examine e principle of intensifying forestry practice in To continue from Walters, "the forester becomes uncertain of the wis
the Golden Age. Only )od could come from studying the past and only disaster action, less because of a lack of knowledge of silviculture than because of h
ere". visualize the fruition of traditional practice In terms of the bewildering and ev
my short lifetime I have seen the Canadian pulp and paper industry range speed of social and Industrial change. Regardless of a natural reluctance of
th in its logging practices and in the species utilized. For (example, when Abitibi honed on European conditions, to desert the Golden Age of forestry, he would be
y Ltd. started operations in Iroquois Falls in 1912 :I the pulpwood was produced if he failed to acknowledge that his plantation (forest) will be harvested, utilized,
because the woods workers came from timbering operations, mainly in the very different ways to very different standards, from those now prevailing. F
somewhat unique with respect to the time period with which he must deal. The u
wood is being delivered to mills in tree lengths, in full tree, and even in the form forestry purposes imposes a large measure of inflexibility in management due to
which Include bark and foliage. Most transport of wood to sills today is by land time between successive crops. ' Under such circumstances where decisions h
tly by truck. The pulp and paper industry initially located its mills on rivers, at a reaching far into the future, it Is vital that these decisions be the best for wh
, downstream from the woodshed ributary to the mill. Today with Intraprovincial industry is capable. The forester of the Golden Age had the immense advantage
ial power grids, with and transport taking over from water, many mills are poorly of biological change was not perceptibly outpaced by the rate of technolog
must live with the inheritance from an earlier technology. Walters goes on to analyze this situation at greater length but I think you get the m
e, originally, was the only wood acceptable by the mills. As spruce regionally An element of the change taking place in Canadian forestry, is the
upply it was reluctantly established that balsam fir could make acceptable pulp. consideration of forest biomass as a source of energy. The concept of the total
ed a weed species until the kraft pulping process was introduced and it has if forest biomass has already raised a substantial resistance by foresters in t
a preferred species. As you all know, aspen is currently the cinderella species. environmental damage, loss of soil nutrients, competition with conventional forest u
conversion process to a new end use to give it value In our economy. and to
at how best to manage it.
5. as been stated that social systems resist change with an energy proportional to The use of the forest for energy will have an immediate effect
of the change that is threatened (Schon, 1971). It is not due to the stubborness provinces devoid of fossil fuels, such as Ontario and Quebec. These provinces ar
s involved, such resistance Is built in and is a unction of the system itself. totally dependent on imports for fossil fuels, Ontario obtaining its coal from the U.S
od has been used as a source of energy since pre-history, and still is. "The most and gas from Western Canada and Quebec being dependent upon imports fro
of recovering energy from wood is to simply burn the material in an excess of countries for its oil. However, both these provinces have extensive forest resourc
e heat so produced. Of all the wood removed from the forests in the world today, which they can call. The energy-producing patterns can be appreciably changed re
For many years statistics on the ise of wood as a fuel have been used as an The form in which forest biomass can make its greatest contribution may b
evel of industrialization of i country; the less developed a country, the greater its Indications are that Canada has enormous reserves of coal and gas to carry on
wood as a fuel. For example, the use of wood as a fuel in the U.S. is 5%. In the 21st century or further but all estimates indicate a short fall in oil by the mid 1980
e, it averages 50% and in developing countries it is as high as 80%. We may one form of energy that forest biomass can supplement.
he use of this indicator. Studies made by the Department of Energy, Mines and Resources
difference between the direct combustion of wood as a fuel and utilization of indicate that in relative amounts forest biomass can make a relatively small contr
r energy Is very great. The former is primitive and relatively inefficient; the latter the total energy supply, perhaps only 5-6% of the total supply. However, in absolu
cated Industrial engineering :technology. Technology is the process of applying the amount of biomass required will be very great.
actical purposes. One of the many factors which will affect forest management if the bi
des direct combustion, forest biomass can be utilized through classification, used for energy will be In the units of measurement and the manner in which the
enation, hydrogasification, hydrolysis and the results can be In solid, liquid or Itself is considered. (n considering biomass, species and volume are of little cons
and oven-dry weight is the unit of importance. Another unit is the expression of e
concept of the utilization of Canadian forests as a source of largescale energy BTUs or metric equivalents. Again our concepts of rotation age will be drastically
evolutionary Implications for foresters. It will directly affect our Ideas of forest from 50 to 80 years to perhaps 5 to 25 years.
od values and energy forms and distributions.
6. Table 1. Summary of Allowable Annual Cuts, Average Harvests
cent estimate of Canada's energy demand shows that we use approximately 8
Apparent Physical Reserves (1 000 m3)
uals 1 quadrillion BTUs and Is usually designated as I x 1015Q. The potential
ts forest, based upon an estimate for the total biomass use in the country is Softwood
Allowable Aver
approximately 2.06Q per year. However, it has been pointed out that energy Physical
an those in use today can supply no more than probably 1096 of our energy British Columbia 99 365 68 !52 31
Alberta 11 385 6 495 4
r 2000. New technologies with few exceptions require very long introduction Saskatchewan 4 512 2 285 2
Manitoba 5 354 1 875 3
ey make a significant impact on society or the economy. 27 795 17 651 10
Ontario 41 460 25 465 15
e latest estimate available to us for wood, as used by the conventional forest Quebec (80
(3
s estimated by conventional techniques is shown in Tables 1 and 2. These are New Brunswick Nova 6 428 7 230 9
Scotia Prince Edward 3 200 3 235 4
ry recent study (Reed and Associates, 1977). Island Newfoundland+ 227 137 3
5 720 300
ble l is self explanatory showing the allowable annual cut, the average harvest 205 446 1 T5 8-2
5
l reserve. In Table 2 the physical reserve is broken down into accessible and
od. These tables are the best guesstimates available to us at the present time.
British Columbia
Alberta 13 531 28 9
Saskatchewan 3 240 55 5
Manitoba 2 202 20 4
15 368
Ontario 11 445 7 330
Quebec 2 665 1 9 385
n forests are Inventoried, such Inventories are normally done to a predetermined
445
New Brunswick Nova 170 2 070
minimum tree diameter, maximum stump height, minimum top diameter
Scotia Prince Edward 793 625
Island Newfoundland 50859 50
s, minimum volume per acre, etc., and these inventories are eventually
50
mes such as board feet, cubic feet, or more recently in cubic metres. 20 558 30
orests are utilized for energy there Is only a peripheral Interest in volume but
Deficit included with softwood Expressed as depletion at the AA
weight, and the tons of dry tons equivalent (DTE). There are no limitations or utilization standard Includes Labrador Average harvest is the
average of the best two years in the 3-year period 1973-75
to size, taper, back thickness, etc., as these factors are irrelevant to biomass
7. 10.
Economic Accessibility Estimates for the Physical
Timber Reserve (1 000 m3/a)
' No Inventory of forest biomass, provincial or federal exists. This conc
Softwood Reserves Is under intense study at this time. It Is estimated that in the normal course of
Accessible Inaccessible Total conventional forest operations only some 40% of a tree is remove
15 065 16 148 31 213 sawtimber or pulpwood. In turn the utilization of this portion of the tree may again
4 032 858 4 890
1 097 1 130 2 227 40-50%. The utilization of the forest stand itself will vary from perhaps 50-90%
1 905 1 574 3 479 depending upon the nature of the stand, species utilized and the species left. On
7 861 2 283 10 144 should remember that inventories give data on so-called merchantable stands bu
2 705 13 290 15 995
(802) n. (802) or nothing is recorded on the so-called unmerchantable stands or waste areas. T
(35) n. (35) magnitude of these areas is shown in Table 3.
d 90 n. 90
1 224 1 196 2 420 Table 3. Areas of conventionally unmerchantable stands
6 479 69 621 y
Class Description Area(ha)
Hardwood Reserve Wildland This Includes barrens, muskeg rock
and scrub and/or land with forest
** ** ** cover substandard to the category
9 377 3 865 13 242 forest land. 519 105 00
2 295 390 2 685
1 618 380 1 998 Provincial Lands Areas suitable for harvest but
unstocked to trees and areas
7 108 930 8 038 . unsuitable for regular harvest.
700 1 360 2 060
Federal Lands Areas suitable for harvest but un
595 n. 595 stocked to trees and areas suitable
820 n. 820 for regular, harvest. 1 574 00
nd 120 n. 120
743 n. 743 TOTAL 616 483 00
23 379- 6 925
There is every indication that in most provinces there is a
rador substantial amount of forest biomass remaining after all legitimate requirements o
Softwood
conventional forest-based industries are met. One important fact not available to
at present is the local distribution of this material and its physical relationship to
population centres where, energy demands exist.
8. The subject of this paper is "Industrial Forestry in Changing Canada"
There are many skeptics regarding the use of forest biomass for energy. In the
good deal of time has been spent discussing energy from forest biomass. This is b
h province of Alberta I'm sure this is true. Forests are a most diffuse source of
any move to this end will have important implications, good and bad that will chan
mpared with fossil fuels. In the latter case conversion plants can be erected at
concepts of forest management completely. It has already been stated that stability
or wellhead while biomass will have to be transported over substantial distances
classic goal of forestry and that sustained yield and the normal forest have be
ersion plant. Being a diffuse source of energy, the utilization of forest biomass
dominant themes of our forestry philosophy.
ome evident, in the manner of clear-cut forests. Such is not the case with oil wells
Now we have a compelling use for forests which is not concerned
ound mining of coal.
degree with tree quality, tree species, tree size but primarily with the site's capa
Forest biomass will present problems in transport and in storage. It has been
maximize its conversion of solar energy through photosynthesis into cellulosic materi
at, to date at least, commercial harvesting of biomass for energy alone is
product required has no particular specification, unlike sawtimber, pulpwood, pole an
c. However, if combined with other uses of the forest such as sawtimber and
and other forest products. The product may be chipped, hogged, crushed, pulver
it can be produced economically. This, however, greatly restricts the location of
however for use, the form depending upon the manner in which the energy is
energy.
extracted.
Three possible distinct phases of the use of biomass for energy are: (1)
It may soon be possible to state that there is no noncommercial forest,
of logging and mill residues. This is Immediately possible with a minimum of
areas or tree components - all of the material will have value. This will require the reth
estment. Its effect on forest management practices would be to almost eliminate
of many of our forest practices.
nd to leave cutover sites in better condition for reforestation. (2) The utilization of
Forest biomass, as a perennial, has many advantages over agric
biomass taken in from logging operations at the mill would include currently
residues as a feedstock for energy. As a crop it can be harvested at any time of the ye
pecies and small and deformed trees not up to current merchantable
over a period of years. It has characteristics that make it possible to convert it into ene
ons. The utilization of stumpwood for energy purposes by mills is under active
a solid, liquid or gaseous state. It therefore has a potential for wide use in one or other
material being hogged and burned with other wood residues. This stage in
various forms in which energy is used in Canada.
ent would capitalize on the infrastructure resulting from conventional logging
. (3) The third phase would be the development of an energy industry quite
m present woodusing mills, distributed across the country to supply energy to the
which they are located.
9. With hybrids of Populus, Sallx and Alnus it is possible to produc
. Distribution of Energy Use In Canada Today (Hart, 1977)_
22.5t/hectare per year. This will work out to approximately 50kW-h/(m 2.a) energy equi
15%
city It was mentioned earlier that harvesting of forest biomass for energy ma
25%
Heating environmental impacts which are undesirable. One point that might be mentioned co
30%
ial (other than electric) energy plantations is that the environmental impact on minicotation culture would be s
25%
ortation agriculture rather than to forestry and should generate a minimum response from th
4%
Equipment concerning environmental damage.
2%
One of the problems faced by our conventional forest management
conventional forest-based industries is that the industries are subject to wild fluctu
demand whether it be for lumber or for pulp and paper. Forest management to a deg
hat this distribution of uses will change much in the near future. Looking at
suffered as a result of these fluctuations. It may well be that if forest biomass is ut
seen that biomass can be used in all of the energy forms shown.
energy it will generate a very stable, slightly increasing level of forest consumption whic
r aspect of forest management that has not yet been touched upon is the
have very few, if any fluctuations. This could serve as a solid base upon which to develo
rest energy plantations. These are under study in a number of countries
management practices.
and appear to have a real potential. Forest energy plantations have the
The above indicates, I think, the fact that our forest management pract
ntrating maximum cellulose production on relatively small areas. The sites
faced with challenges that never existed in the past. In the next decade we will be rewrit
good agricultural land to primarily peat and wet areas. The boreal forest has
of the textbooks on this subject and 1 hope we will be applying new concepts and techn
up to 1/10 of 1% of the solar energy falling upon It in the conversion of such
the forest to meet the country's needs in the not too distant future.
ynthesis into cellulosic material. Using hybridization and what may be
gricultural techniques, the use of herbicides and fertilizers, It Is estimated
ble to generate an efficiency In solar conversion of up to 4-5%. This Is an
cy of the order of 40 and 50 times. At present In Sweden there are some 20
hed to study the regional aspects of such efficiency.
10. f
REFERENCES
Forests, 1976. Environment Canada.
es, Availability and Costs of Future Energy". Proceedings,
osium No. l: Energy, Sir Sanford Fleeting College, Lindsay, Ontario.
ember 3, 1977.
"Beyond the Stable State". Temple Smith Ltd., London,
Associates. "Forest Management in Canada". Forest Management
tute, Environment Canada, 1977.
he Uncertain Forester". Forestry Chronicle, June, 1965.
Technological Progress and the Future of Wood in the Industrial
". Technology of Forestry - Today and Tomorrow. Interforst,
ich, 1970.
i